Semiotics of Musical Time

Semiotics of Musical Time
Author: Thomas Reiner
Publisher: Peter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2000
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN:

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Semiotics of Musical Time investigates the link between musical time and the world of signs and symbols. It examines the extent to which musical time is a product of signs, sign systems, and sign-oriented behavior. Sound is discussed as a potential sign of time and of musical time. Inherent and recognizable temporal features are identified in a number of musical works. Time as a compositional concern is examined in the case of Igor Stravinsky and Karlheinz Stockhausen. A principal distinction between hearing associated with perception and listening associated with cognition provides the basis for the proposition that musical time is both unheard and imperceptible. The role of concepts, and their designations, is investigated to demonstrate that consciousness of musical time involves semiotic processes.

Semiotic Model of Musical Time

Semiotic Model of Musical Time
Author: Thomas Reiner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 410
Release: 1995
Genre: Musical meter and rhythm
ISBN:

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Musical Semiotics in Growth

Musical Semiotics in Growth
Author: Eero Tarasti
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 668
Release: 1996
Genre: Literary Criticism & Collections
ISBN: 9780253329493

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The international research project on Musical Signification, since its founding over ten years ago, has sought to win new scholars to musical semiotics. To that end, the Department of Musicology at Helsinki University has already organized five international doctoral and postdoctoral seminars. They have become something of a tradition. The anthology consists of papers presented in the three first seminars covering areas from music philosophy and aesthetics to the analysis of vocal and instrumental as well as electro-acoustic music, interrelationships of arts, music history, post-modernism, etc.

The Sense of Music

The Sense of Music
Author: Raymond Monelle
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2010-09-17
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1400824036

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The fictional Dr. Strabismus sets out to write a new comprehensive theory of music. But music's tendency to deconstruct itself combined with the complexities of postmodernism doom him to failure. This is the parable that frames The Sense of Music, a novel treatment of music theory that reinterprets the modern history of Western music in the terms of semiotics. Based on the assumption that music cannot be described without reference to its meaning, Raymond Monelle proposes that works of the Western classical tradition be analyzed in terms of temporality, subjectivity, and topic theory. Critical of the abstract analysis of musical scores, Monelle argues that the score does not reveal music's sense. That sense--what a piece of music says and signifies--can be understood only with reference to history, culture, and the other arts. Thus, music is meaningful in that it signifies cultural temporalities and themes, from the traditional manly heroism of the hunt to military power to postmodern "polyvocality." This theoretical innovation allows Monelle to describe how the Classical style of the eighteenth century--which he reads as a balance of lyric and progressive time--gave way to the Romantic need for emotional realism. He argues that irony and ambiguity subsequently eroded the domination of personal emotion in Western music as well as literature, killing the composer's subjectivity with that of the author. This leaves Dr. Strabismus suffering from the postmodern condition, and Raymond Monelle with an exciting, controversial new approach to understanding music and its history.

Time in Contemporary Musical Thought

Time in Contemporary Musical Thought
Author: Jonathan D. Kramer
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2015-12-22
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1134350864

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The articles in this collection create an interdisciplinary perspective. While attempting no unified vision, it approaches the subject from a variety of perspectives: aesthetics, psychology, sociology, ethnomusicology, compositional practice, and semiotics. While all composers are necessarily concerned with time, and while all theorists deal at least indirectly with music as a temporal phenomenon, the study of musical time has been fragmented. It is appropriate that no clear paradigm, model or direction has yet emerged in the study of muscial time, since time itself is both pervasive and elusive.

Song and Signification

Song and Signification
Author: Raymond Monelle
Publisher:
Total Pages: 116
Release: 1995
Genre: Music
ISBN:

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Making Musical Time

Making Musical Time
Author: Guerino Mazzola
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2021-11-15
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3030856291

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This book is a comprehensive examination of the conception, perception, performance, and composition of time in music across time and culture. It surveys the literature of time in mathematics, philosophy, psychology, music theory, and somatic studies (medicine and disability studies) and looks ahead through original research in performance, composition, psychology, and education. It is the first monograph solely devoted to the theory of construction of musical time since Kramer in 1988, with new insights, mathematical precision, and an expansive global and historical context. The mathematical methods applied for the construction of musical time are totally new. They relate to category theory (projective limits) and the mathematical theory of gestures. These methods and results extend the music theory of time but also apply to the applied performative understanding of making music. In addition, it is the very first approach to a constructive theory of time, deduced from the recent theory of musical gestures and their categories. Making Musical Time is intended for a wide audience of scholars with interest in music. These include mathematicians, music theorists, (ethno)musicologists, music psychologists / educators / therapists, music performers, philosophers of music, audiologists, and acousticians.

Musical Semantics

Musical Semantics
Author: Ole Kühl
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2008
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783039117185

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Music offers a new insight into human cognition. The musical play with sounds in time, in which we share feelings, gestures and narratives, has fascinated people from all times and cultures. The author studies this semiotic behavior in the light of research from a number of sources. Being an analytical study, the volume combines evidence from neurobiology, developmental psychology and cognitive science. It aims to bridge the gap between music as an empirical object in the world and music as lived experience. This is the semantic aspect of music: how can something like an auditory stream of structured sound evoke such a strong reaction in the listener? The book is in two parts. In the first part, the biological foundations of music and their cognitive manifestations are considered in order to establish a groundwork for speaking of music in generic, cross-cultural terms. The second part develops the semantic aspect of music as an embodied, emotively grounded and cognitively structured expression of human experience.

Musical Semiotics Revisited

Musical Semiotics Revisited
Author: Eero Tarasti
Publisher:
Total Pages: 696
Release: 2003
Genre: Music
ISBN:

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A Theory of Musical Semiotics

A Theory of Musical Semiotics
Author: Eero Tarasti
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 356
Release: 1994-12-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780253356499

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"Since [Tarasti's] is unquestionably the most fully developed narrative theory in the literature, this book is an important landmark . . . " —Music & Letters Eero Tarasti advances a semiotic theory of music based on information provided by the history of Western music and by various sign theories. A Theory of Musical Semiotics provides a model for the semiotic analysis of both musical structure and semantics. It introduces English-language readers to musical narratology, which has been largely the province of European researchers.